Neumos Presents
American Aquarium
with Special Guests
Nov 10
Doors: 7:00 PM
21 & Over
Neumos
Nov 10, 2024
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DateNov 10, 2024
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Doors Open7:00 PM
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VenueNeumos
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Ticket Prices$22.00 - $25.00
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On SaleOn Sale Now
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Ages21 & Over
For nearly two decades, American Aquarium have pushed toward that rare form of rock-and-roll
that’s revelatory in every sense. “For us the sweet spot is when you’ve got a rock band that makes
you scream along to every word, and it’s not until you’re coming down at three a.m. that you realize
those words are saying something real about your life,” says frontman BJ Barham. “That’s what
made us fall in love with music in the first place, and that’s the goal in everything we do.” On their
new album The Fear of Standing Still, the North Carolina-bred band embody that dynamic with more
intensity than ever before, endlessly matching their gritty breed of country-rock with Barham’s
bravest and most incisive songwriting to date. As he reflects on matters both personal and
sociocultural—e.g., the complexity of Southern identity, the intersection of generational trauma and
the dismantling of reproductive rights—American Aquarium instill every moment of The Fear of
Standing Still with equal parts unbridled spirit and illuminating empathy.
Recorded live at the legendary Sunset Sound in Los Angeles, The Fear of Standing Still marks
American Aquarium’s second outing with producer Shooter Jennings—a three-time Grammy
winner who also helmed production on 2020’s critically lauded Lamentations, as well as albums from
the likes of Brandi Carlile and Tanya Tucker. In a departure from the stripped-down subtlety of
2022’s Chicamacomico (a largely acoustic rumination on grief), the band’s tenth studio LP piles on
plenty of explosive riffs and hard-charging rhythms, bringing a visceral energy to the most nuanced
and poetic of lyrics. “In our live show the band’s like a freight train that never lets up, and for this
record I really wanted to showcase how big and anthemic we can be,” notes Barham, whose
bandmates include guitarist Shane Boeker, pedal-steel guitarist Neil Jones, keyboardist Rhett
Huffman, drummer Ryan Van Fleet, and bassist Alden Hedges.
Mixed by four-time Grammy winner Trina Shoemaker (Queens of the Stone Age, Emmylou Harris),
The Fear of Standing Still shares its title with one of the first songs Barham wrote for the album—a
soul-baring look at how raising a family has radically altered his priorities and perspective. In the
process of creating what he refers to as “a record about growing up and growing older,” Barham
also found his songwriting closely informed by his ten years of sobriety, as well as his ever-
deepening connection with American Aquarium’s community of fans. “Whenever someone tells me
that one of our songs helped them in some way, it encourages me to be more and more
open—almost like peeling a layer off an onion,” he says. “This album is a writer 18 years into his
career, peeling away the next layer and seeing just how human we can make this thing.”
Expanding on the raw vitality of previous albums like 2012’s Jason Isbell-produced Burn.Flicker.Die,
The Fear of Standing Still kicks offs with “Crier”: a gloriously ferocious track that swiftly obliterates
worn-out ideals of masculine behavior. “It’s a song about breaking down what many of us learned
from our fathers growing up—this idea that boys don’t cry, or that crying is a form of weakness,”
says Barham, who co-wrote “Crier” with singer/songwriter Stephen Wilson Jr. “I wanted to send
the message that it’s not natural to bottle everything up inside, because all of us are meant to feel.”
Fueled by a savage and soaring vocal performance from Barham, the result is a perfect encapsulation
of American Aquarium’s multilayered artistry. “I don’t think anyone’s going to get through that first
listen of ‘Crier’ and think, ‘Wow, what a great song about disrupting the cycle of toxic masculinity!’”
Barham points out. “It seems more likely that it’ll make them want to dance and jump around, and
then when they put the headphones on and listen a little closer to the lyrics, that’s when they’ll start
to understand what we’re talking about.”
A resolutely outspoken artist who’s emerged as one of the most progressive voices in country music,
Barham infuses an element of trenchant social commentary into a number of tracks on The Fear of
Standing Still. On “Southern Roots,” for instance, Georgia-born singer/songwriter Katie Pruitt joins
American Aquarium for a spellbinding meditation on pushing against the boundaries of traditional
Southern identity. “People can complain all they want about how backwards the South is, but the
only way we’ll see any change is to take it upon ourselves,” says Barham. “For me, that means raising
my daughter so that she’ll never witness the closed-mindedness and blatant disrespect for certain
people that I often saw at her age. Because if you really love something the way I love the South,
then you want to see it grow.” Co-written by Barham and Pruitt, “Southern Roots” starts off as a
beautifully understated folk song graced with heavenly harmonies, then builds to a reverb-drenched
frenzy at the bridge—a shift that sharply intensifies the track’s galvanizing power.
Another song anchored in Barham’s ardent belief in breaking generational patterns, “Babies Having
Babies” arrives as a finespun piece of storytelling that doubles as an emphatic pro-choice anthem.
“It’s a mix of fiction and personal experience, and felt like an important story to tell at a time when a
woman’s right to choose is being taken away,” says Barham. After opening on a nostalgic tale of a
whirlwind summer romance, “Babies Having Babies” slowly takes on a powerful urgency as the
narrative turns to questions of consequence and self-preservation (from the second verse: “We
packed up a bag and drove to the city/Shouldered through the pickets and the hand-painted
signs/They called her names while they called themselves Christians/That sort of hate’s got no place
in any faith of mine”). “I grew up in a small and very conservative town where abortion was not an
option, so I saw a lot of people trapped in that generational cycle of getting pregnant at a young age
and ending up stuck in the same town forever instead of following whatever dreams they might have
had,” says Barham. “I wanted to write about what could have happened if one of those girls had
refused to give up her aspirations, and made that choice to live another way.”
While American Aquarium bring a lived-in intimacy to all of The Fear of Standing Still, songs like
“Cherokee Purples” encompass a particularly tender emotionality. A wistful reminiscence of all the
charmed and wild summers of Barham’s youth, the track unfolds in so many gorgeously detailed
images (kudzu vines and fireflies, menthol cigarettes and Big League Chew), each rendered with a
loving specificity that lingers in the listener’s heart. “‘Cherokee Purples’ came from me making a
tomato sandwich in my kitchen, and immediately getting taken back to all the summer days when
we’d get dropped off at my grandmother’s so my parents could go to work,” says Barham. “It’s
crazy how something as simple as a tomato sandwich with Duke’s Mayonnaise can take me to a
whole other world, but to me it’s almost like a talisman of where I’m from and how I was raised.”
Meanwhile, on “The Curse of Growing Old,” American Aquarium look to the other end of the life
spectrum, conjuring a life-affirming mood despite the song’s excruciating honesty. “I wrote that
after talking with my grandmother at her 92 nd birthday party and learning what it was like for her to
grow older and watch so many people in her life pass away,” says Barham. “It’s true that getting
older is a gift, but it’s a gift we pay for with an incredible amount of loss.”
For Barham, the sharing of hard truths is indelibly tied to his sense of devotion to American
Aquarium’s audience—and to his belief in rock-and-roll as a singularly unifying force. “All I really
want to do is put words to the emotions that most people have a difficult time expressing on their
own,” he reveals. “No matter what that emotion is, when you put it into a song and then get to
those moments when a whole bunch of people are singing that song all together, it makes you see
that you’re part of something bigger than you ever realized. That’s when you can really affect
people’s lives, and to me this record is another stepping stone to making that a reality.”
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